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Adapting for a
Green Economy:
COMPANIES,
COMMUNITIES
AND CLIMATE
CHANGE
A Caring for Climate Report
2 name of publication
A Caring for Climate report by the United Nations Global Compact,
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Oxfam, and
World Resources Institute (WRI)
UN Global Compact Contributors:
Lila Karbassi

Jayoung Park

www.unglobalcompact.org
UNEP Contributors:
Tim Kasten

Richard Munang

www.unep.org
Oxfam Contributor:
Heather Coleman

www.oxfam.org
WRI Contributors:
Samantha Putt del Pino

Eliot Metzger



Sally Prowitt

www.wri.org
Lead Consultant: Nancy Hopkins
Designer: Tannaz Fassihi
Disclaimer
The views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the
United Nations (including the UN Global Compact Office and the UN Environ-
ment Programme), Oxfam and the World Resources Institute. The inclusion
of company examples in this publication is intended strictly for learning pur-
poses and does not constitute an endorsement of the individual companies
by the United Nations and authors of this report. The material in this publica-
tion may be quoted and used provided there is proper attribution.
Copyright
© 2011, UN Global Compact, UN Environment Programme, Oxfam and the
World Resources Institute.
The material in this publication is copyrighted. The UN Global Compact en-
courages the dissemination of the content for educational purposes. Content
from this publication may be used freely without prior permission, provided
that clear attribution is given to UN Global Compact, UN Environment Pro-
gramme, Oxfam and World Resources Institute and that content is not used
for commercial purposes.
Creative Commons License
Copyright 2011 UN Global Compact.
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommer-
cial-NoDerivative Works 3.0 License. To view a copy of the license,
/>3
Foreword 4
Executive Summary 5

1.Climate Change Risk, Sustainable Development
and Implications for Business 8
Introduction 9
Impacts of Climate Change on Sustainable Development
and Economic and Social Stability 12
Climate Change Adaptation and the Private Sector 17
Climate Change Risks for Companies 19
Adaptation Solutions that Promote Sustainable Development
and Build Resilience 22
Looking Ahead 24
2.Doing Business in Our Changing Climate:
Measures for Practical Business Action 25
Introduction 26
Private Sector Strategies for Adaptation: Experience to Date 27
Insights from Caring for Climate Companies 30
Measures for Practical Business Action: Enabling Internal Champions 33
Conclusion 39
3.Catalyzing Strategic Private Sector Adaptation: Policy Measures
to Promote Effective Business Investment and Engagement 40
Introduction 41
Barriers to Private Sector Engagement in Building Climate Resilience 42
Climate Change Adaptation Policy and Business Engagement 44
Fostering an Enabling Environment for Private Sector Adaptation:
Policy Measures 46
Conclusion 54
Moving Forward 55
Endnotes 56
Bibliography 63
Key Terms and Concepts 68
Caring For Climate Company Examples 69

Table of Contents
4
Foreword
Twenty years ago, world leaders gathered at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and signed the
rst global agreement to tackle climate change. At the time, the impacts of climate change on
communities and economies were just beginning to be understood, and the role of the private
sector in responding to these challenges was only just emerging. But two decades later, climate
change is no longer a distant threat looming on the horizon; it has emerged as arguably the
greatest global challenge of our time.
And while much of the responsibility to drive climate change solutions that address the
needs of the poorest and most vulnerable rests with governments, it has become increasingly
clear that business will be an essential partner in preparing for and responding to the impacts
of a changing climate and in building a global green economy.
At the end of this year, governments will gather in Durban, South Africa, for the next round
of United Nations negotiations to advance global action on climate change. In June 2012, the
UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) will seek to secure new and comprehen-
sive commitments to sustainable development.
This publication aims to support the efforts leading up to Rio+20, as well as the activities,
processes, commitments and partnerships that ow from it. By highlighting the nexus among
climate change risks and opportunities, sustainable development and climate change adapta-
tion, Adapting for a Green Economy provides useful guidance to business leaders and policymakers
alike.
The devastating environmental, social and economic impacts of climate change are already
being felt around the world, with the poorest nations and communities disproportionately
affected. This report offers insights on important questions surrounding the role of business in
adaptation:
● In practice, how can businesses address risks in their own supply chains and operations
while also supporting the adaptation efforts of the communities on which they depend?
● How can the private sector build climate resilience in partnership with communities in ways
that are mutually supportive?

● What are the barriers that may prevent effective business engagement in adaptation?
● How can business investment in adaptation complement necessary public policies, and how
can public policies create the context for appropriate private sector action?
Developed in collaboration with Oxfam International, the World Resources Institute and the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Adapting for a Green Economy is based on the
results of a qualitative survey of business leaders who support the Caring for Climate initiative,
a joint United Nations Global Compact-UNEP platform involving more than 400 businesses
committed to advancing climate action.
There is much that businesses of all sizes and sectors can contribute to effective climate
adaptation. This report provides actionable information that can help create effective strategies
that benet business and communities, coupled with common-sense suggestions for supportive
government policy.
Manish Bapna
Managing Director
World Resources
Institute
Jeremy Hobbs
Executive Director
Oxfam International
Achim Steiner
Executive Director
UN Environment
Programme

Georg Kell
Executive Director
UN Global Compact

5
Executive Summary

Drawing on the results of a 2010 survey of
corporate signatories to the United Nations
Global Compact and the United Nations Envi-
ronment Programme Caring for Climate ini-
tiative, as well as on existing literature, this
report makes the business case for private sec-
tor adaptation to climate change in ways that
build the resilience of vulnerable communi-
ties in developing countries. It then offers
actions that companies and policymakers can
pursue to catalyze and scale up private sec-
tor action on adaptation. It is ultimately the
responsibility of the public sector to meet the
critical climate change adaptation needs of
the poor and vulnerable; thus private sector
engagement cannot substitute for critically
needed public investment and policies. How-
ever, private sector investment can serve as a
pivotal part of a comprehensive government-
led approach to addressing climate impacts.
This report is a resource for companies
with a national, regional or global reach that
are interested in increasing their strategic
focus on adaptation in developing countries
where they have operations, supply chains,
employees and current or potential custom-
ers. While many companies are focused on
climate change mitigation — slowing the
rate of climate change through reduction of
greenhouse gas emissions and other strate-

gies — most have yet to develop strategies
for dealing with the immediate to long-term
consequences of climate change. This report
is also aimed at national and international
policymakers involved in climate change
and sustainable development dialogues and
decision-making, including those who will
participate in the United Nations Confer-
ence on Sustainable Development in 2012
(Rio+20). It is hoped that the report’s ndings
will be useful for a much wider range of ac-
tors as well, including small, local businesses
in developing countries that are on the front
line of climate impacts; civil society organiza-
tions seeking to strengthen their work around
climate change and sustainable development;
and subnational policymakers, who are in a
key position to shape a productive interface
among government, communities and busi-
nesses.

Private Sector Adaptation,
Sustainable Development and
the Green Economy
The challenges that communities in devel-
oping countries face as a result of climate
change — such as more frequent and intense
storms, water scarcity, declining agricultural
productivity and poor health — also pose
serious challenges for businesses. Community

risks are business risks. Both local and global
companies depend on community members
as suppliers, customers and employees. They
also depend on local resources, services and
infrastructure to be able to operate. It is dif-
cult to separate community well-being from
companies’ viability and, in turn, overall
economic growth.
Businesses that make these connections
and adapt to climate change with community
needs in mind can gain a competitive edge.
Businesses that respond to climate change in
ways that undermine communities’ efforts to
adapt may face reputational and brand risks,
and they may even lose their ability to oper-
ate in certain locations. Through responsible,
strategic approaches to addressing climate
change risks and opportunities, in consulta-
tion with people in affected communities,
companies can:
● Avoid costs, manage liabilities and build
resilience to climate change impacts by
addressing climate risks throughout their
operations and value chains, while at the
same time increasing community resil-
ience.
● Expand market share and create wealth in
communities by developing and deploying
new products and services that help people
adapt.

● Access new opportunities to collaborate
with the public sector, as developing coun-
try governments seek corporate partners
who can effectively deliver goods and
services that support high-priority climate
change adaptation efforts.
● Build corporate reputation and exercise
good corporate citizenship by showing
commitment to decreasing climate vulner-
ability and promoting long-term resilience
in places where it is needed most.
6
Investment or other private sector actions
taken to adapt to climate change can also
have the benet of promoting a transition to
a “green economy”, which has been identi-
ed by governments as one of the anchoring
themes of Rio+20. In its simplest expression,
a green economy is one that is low-carbon,
resource-efcient and socially inclusive. In
a green economy, growth in income and
employment can be generated by strategic
public and private investments in developed
and developing countries that reduce green-
house gas (GHG) emissions, improve resource
efciency and prevent the loss of biodiversity
and ecosystem services (that is, the benets of
nature to people). Businesses can accelerate
the transition to a green economy by taking
advantage of the natural synergies that exist

between green economy initiatives and cli-
mate change adaptation opportunities. When
businesses work with communities to restore
mangrove forests as natural barriers against
storms, or develop affordable drip irrigation
equipment that can be used by small-scale
farmers facing water scarcity, they are also
greening the economy.
Business Perspectives and
Action on Adaptation
The Caring for Climate survey revealed that
83 percent of 72 responding companies
believe that climate change impacts pose a
risk to their products or services. A slightly
higher percentage of companies (86 percent)
think that responding to climate change risks,
or investing in adaptation solutions, poses
a business opportunity for their company.
Many Caring for Climate companies surveyed
have employees and operations in developing
countries, which are disproportionately vul-
nerable to climate change and have limited
resources with which to adapt. Not only are
companies that operate in, have markets in
or source in developing countries exposed to
risk, but they can also play a critical role in
building climate resilience in these countries.
However, beyond planning for the most
obvious or immediate threats — increasingly
unreliable access to key inputs like water and

energy, for example, or damage to assets from
ooding — most companies are not yet tak-
ing concrete steps to address climate change
risks and to respond to new opportunities in
a comprehensive, integrated way.
There is not yet widespread understand-
ing among Caring for Climate signatories
of what climate adaptation is and what it
means for them or for the markets they serve.
Uncertainties about the location, magnitude,
potential timing and consequences of climate
change impacts make it risky for them to
tackle adaptation on their own, and few good
tools exist to help businesses assess climate
risks and opportunities. The survey revealed
that companies nd it difcult to incorporate
scientic climate change data, which typi-
cally cover a large geographic area and span a
long-term time frame, into practical business
decision-making, which tends to be shorter-
term in nature and location-specic. Informa-
tion about the full range of adaptation costs
and benets is often not available as an input
to companies’ investment analyses. Compa-
nies may see few economic and policy incen-
tives to make signicant up-front investments
that bolster long-term climate resilience, for
the company and for communities that will
be most affected by climate change impacts.
These factors can make it difcult for

businesses to make adaptation a strategic
priority. Even if key internal stakeholders
have prioritized adaptation, it can be hard
for them to nd the capacity to consult and
communicate with a wide range of key ex-
ternal stakeholders, including suppliers and
customers. Few Caring for Climate signatories
are engaging with suppliers around the issue
of climate risk, and few are exploring how
their customers’ needs may change as a result
of climate change impacts, and what the
corresponding business implications — and
possible missed opportunities — may be of
shifting demands and preferences. Compa-
nies also reported challenges in analyzing the
connection between their own adaptation
needs and community needs; only half of the
companies that responded to the Caring for
Climate survey said that they have recognized
the possible social consequences (positive or
negative) of their adaptation strategies. In the
end, very few Caring for Climate signatories
have been able to design comprehensive
adaptation goals with corresponding business
indicators to track economic performance
and progress towards those goals.
Although business adaptation to climate
change is clearly at a nascent stage, ap-
proximately one-third of companies sur-
veyed reported having a strong emphasis

on addressing climate risks, and about the
same percentage reported a strong emphasis
on responding to adaptation opportunities.
7
The survey revealed some emerging best
practices in how companies are responding
to complex climate change challenges and op-
portunities while contributing to sustainable
development. This report provides several
case studies that not only serve as models for
other companies, but also provide evidence
that private sector adaptation at the nexus of
company needs and the needs of vulnerable
communities in developing countries makes
good business sense.
Strategic private sector adaptation to
climate change must be a purposeful process:
It will not happen by chance. Companies
must prioritize adaptation and take action
to address risks and pursue opportunities.
Governments can assist companies to over-
come barriers to investment and harness the
resources and innovation of the private sector
to contribute to the public good.
Practical Measures for Companies
Companies will nd that addressing the
impacts of climate change necessitates a
departure from business as usual; traditional
approaches are insufcient. Adaptation cham-
pions within the company will want to focus

their colleagues’ attention on three key ques-
tions: 1) What does climate resilience mean
for the company? 2) What will position the
company to navigate risks and lead markets
in a warming world? and 3) How will the
company engage partners to minimize risks
and seize opportunities? Effective, comprehen-
sive responses to these questions will require
companies to…
● Connect climate “adaptation” and “re-
silience” to the company and corporate
culture, building on existing mitigation
initiatives.
● Integrate climate adaptation into core
strategic business planning processes.
● Align business objectives with adaptation
priorities.
● Build a portfolio of climate-resilient
goods and services.
● Build mutually benecial strategies with
stakeholders; build communication
channels.
● Partner with internal and external
decision-makers.
Practical Measures for Policymakers
Governments have a central role to play in
catalyzing private sector provision of goods and
services that support climate change adapta-
tion and in encouraging climate-resilient busi-
ness practices. Some public sector efforts to in-

centivize business contributions to adaptation
must be developed and implemented through
agreements at the international level. Policy
focus at the national and local level, however,
is essential, because adaptation challenges and
solutions are specic to each locality, and busi-
ness barriers and opportunities will be country-
specic. To create a facilitating environment
for private sector investment in climate change
adaptation, policymakers can…
● Demonstrate policy and nance
commitment to adaptation.
● Engage businesses as stakeholders in
planning and implementation.
● Stimulate the market for adaptation
through nancial and risk-reduction
incentives.
● Develop policy and regulatory frameworks
to guide corporate practices.
● Provide businesses with the information
and tools they need to make investments
that support climate resilience in vulner-
able communities.
● Consider new forms of public-private
partnerships to tackle the most complex
challenges to sustainable development and
climate resilience.
Conclusion
Addressing the adaptation needs of vulner-
able communities at the scale that is necessary

will require unprecedented levels of coopera-
tion, collaboration and resource mobilization
among governments, businesses, civil society
groups and communities themselves. The
private sector has much to contribute to the
development and implementation of climate
change adaptation solutions, including sector-
specic expertise, technology, signicant levels
of nancing, efciency and an entrepreneurial
spirit. The key is to nd the nexus of shared
interest where business incentives align with
communities’ adaptation needs. Companies
that rigorously assess climate change risks
and opportunities and implement creative
solutions that build long-term resilience will
create business value while making important
contributions to sustainable development and
equitable green growth.
8
1.CLIMATE
CHANGE RISK,
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
AND
IMPLICATIONS
FOR BUSINESS
9
Introduction
Climate change is not a distant threat loom-
ing on the horizon. It is already here

1
, and it
is arguably the greatest challenge of our time.
The impacts of climate change — from rising
temperatures to glacial melt and rising sea
levels — threaten global economic stabil-
ity and security. Climate change also ham-
pers implementation of the United Nations
sustainable development agenda, specically
achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals.
2
To date, much emphasis has been placed
on the need to mitigate global warming by
reducing emissions of harmful greenhouse
gases (GHGs). However, it is equally impor-
tant to develop comprehensive strategies that
enable people to thrive and remain resilient
under changing climatic conditions. While all
countries will face climate change impacts,
this imperative is particularly urgent for vul-
nerable communities in developing countries.
These countries — along with many others
— are already experiencing more extreme
weather events, increased food and water in-
security, and negative health effects, and they
have the fewest resources with which to cope.
It is ultimately the responsibility of the
public sector — through the provision of
public nance and through targeted inter-

national, national and local initiatives — to
meet the climate change adaptation needs of
vulnerable communities. Many critical ad-
aptation interventions can and will be made
only through public or civil society invest-
ments (for example, building the capacity of
communities to mitigate disaster risk, prepare
for disasters and engage with policymakers
on disaster risk reduction and management).
However, the private sector also has an
important and complementary role to play in
helping communities adapt.
Leading companies, large and small, are
turning greater attention to the implica-
tions of climate change on their businesses.
Companies are starting to recognize risks
of rising costs for inputs and raw materials,
disruptions in their supply chains, threats to
their labour force, and changing customer de-
mand.

They are just beginning to understand
the nature and potential impact of these
climate change threats and the implications
of community vulnerability for their own
business activities.
3
In fact, businesses often
face shared challenges with those in commu-
nities where they source or operate.

At the same time, some communities in
the developing world have begun to adapt
to climate change and build their resilience
to climate impacts, often in ways that have
co-benets for sustainable development. Such
activities include conserving water, improv-
ing natural and man-made barriers that pro-
tect against storms, planting drought-resistant
seed varieties, and using innovative nancial
tools, such as microinsurance, to manage
increasing climate-related risks. Many adapta-
tion activities contribute to sustainable de-
velopment, and sustainable development can
also build communities’ resilience and ability
to adapt to a changing climate.
4
While climate change presents a challenge
of enormous breadth and complexity, it can
also serve as a catalyst for positive economic
transformation. Climate change provides a
“wake-up call” warning that the prevailing
economic model is not sustainable.
5
Climate
change solutions require a better balance
among growth, resource use and equity. This
more balanced model — which many are
referring to as the “green economy” — is
quickly gaining traction and will serve as one
of the anchoring themes of the United Na-

tions Conference on Sustainable Development
in 2012 (Rio+20).
6

UNEP denes a green economy as one that
ADAPTATION AND RESILIENCE
Caring for Climate, a sub-group of the United Nations
Global Compact, defines climate change adaptation as
“initiatives and measures to reduce the vulnerability of
natural and human systems against actual or expected
climate change effects.”
Resilience is defined as “the ability of a social or ecologi-
cal system to absorb disturbances while still retaining
the same basic structure and ways of functioning, the
capacity for self-organization, and the capacity to adapt
to stress and change.”
A list of key climate change terms and concepts used
in this report is provided as Annex A at the end of the
report.
10
“results in improved human well-being and
social equity, while signicantly reducing en-
vironmental risks and ecological scarcities.”
7

In its simplest expression, a green economy
is one that is low-carbon, resource-efcient
and socially inclusive.
8
In a green economy,

growth in income and employment can be
generated by strategic public and private
investments in developed and develop-
ing countries that reduce GHG emissions,
improve resource efciency and prevent the
loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services
(i.e., the benets of nature to people).
9
Recent
analysis by UNEP shows that reallocating
just 2 percent of global GDP from “brown”
to “green” investment can enhance long-run
economic performance and increase total
global wealth.
10
Signicantly, it does so while
enhancing stocks of renewable resources for
public benet, reducing environmental risks
and rebuilding our capacity to generate pros-
perity,
11
especially for the world’s poor, whose
livelihoods are heavily dependent on natural
resources.
Investing early in green economic growth
can help buffer the impact of climate change
on vulnerable communities. Private sector
investments that help vulnerable people
and communities adapt to climate change
impacts — particularly those that facilitate

improved use of increasingly scarce resources,
or help to renew and restore them — are an
important part of the broader green economy
paradigm. The inextricable linkages between
human and environmental well-being, eco-
nomic and social stability, and the long-term
protability of the private sector provide the
foundation for green economic growth. It
is in businesses’ interest to adapt to climate
change in ways that contribute to sustainable
development, and to ensure that their adapta-
tion choices do not impede communities’
long-term resilience. Businesses will need to
deploy their resources, innovative capacity
and expertise to develop effective adaptation
solutions, and in so doing they must revise
their existing models and risk-management
structures. It is essential for companies to
work in direct partnership with national, re-
gional and local-level stakeholders to ensure
that these adaptation solutions address prior-
ity needs. Private sector engagement cannot
substitute for critically needed public invest-
ment and policies, but it can be a pivotal part
of a comprehensive approach to addressing
climate impacts.
This chapter highlights the connections
among climate change impacts, human
development, and economic and social stabil-
ity, and the resulting risks and opportunities

that climate change adaptation presents for
the private sector. Drawing on data gathered
through a 2010 survey of Caring for Climate
corporate signatories, as well as on existing
literature, it makes the business case for pri-
vate sector adaptation investments in two key
areas — operations and the value chain, and
new products and services — as businesses
engage with climate-vulnerable communities
in the developing world. The chapter also
sets the stage for a presentation of strategic
measures that businesses (Chapter 2) and gov-
ernments (Chapter 3) can adopt to facilitate
private sector strengthening of economic and
social resilience to climate change.
There are two primary audiences for this
report: companies and policymakers. The
report is written to assist businesses with a
national, regional or global reach that are in-
terested in increasing their strategic focus on
adaptation to build internal support, analyze
their climate risks, take action and contrib-
ute to the green economy. It also speaks to
national and international policymakers
involved in climate change and sustainable
development dialogues and decision-making,
including those who will participate in
Rio+20. It is hoped that the report’s ndings
will also be useful for a much wider range
of actors, including small, local businesses

in developing countries that are on the front
line of climate impacts, and civil society
organizations seeking to strengthen their
work and form new alliances around climate
change and sustainable development issues.
Many of the policy measures presented can be
used by subnational policymakers, who are in
a key position to shape a productive interface
among government, communities and busi-
nesses around the issues of climate change
adaptation and long-term resilience.
11
ABOUT CARING FOR CLIMATE SIGNATORIES AND THE 2010 SURVEY
Caring for Climate signatories are a diverse group, comprising 262
large companies and 115 small and medium-sized enterprises from
65 countries across the globe. Chief executive officers endorse the
Caring for Climate Statement to demonstrate leadership in advanc-
ing practical solutions and strategies to address climate change and
to help shape the global climate change policy agenda.
A survey of Caring for Climate signatories was developed through a
partnership among the United Nations Global Compact, the World
Resources Institute (WRI), Oxfam and the United Nations Environ-
ment Programme (UNEP). The survey sought to explore the follow-
ing areas: assessment of the impacts of climate change on busi-
ness operations and investments in adaptation solutions; corporate
climate change adaptation strategies; and companies’ global climate
change policy positions and policy engagements. The 160 companies
of the Caring for Climate Working Group on Climate Change and
Development were invited to participate in the survey, which was
fielded online in November 2010.

Caring for Climate received 72 responses from companies across a
variety of industry sectors with operations in developed and develop-
ing countries. Survey analysis was conducted by the UN Global Com-
pact in collaboration with master’s degree students from the Earth
Institute, Columbia University. Survey responses were reported in ag-
gregate form only and were not attributed to individual respondents.
Because Caring for Climate signatories are, by definition, among the
businesses that are the most interested in and engaged on climate
change, their perspectives and actions in the area of climate change
adaptation may not be representative of the private sector as a
whole. However, the survey provides a useful “snapshot” of where a
set of leading companies currently stands on this issue.
Notes:
By endorsing the Caring for Climate Statement, signatories commit to un-
dertake serious efforts to address climate change and to report progress in the spirit of
continuous improvement. The full statement can be found at www.unglobalcompact.org.
The Caring for Climate Working Group on Climate Change and Development comprises
senior corporate executives from Caring for Climate signatories as well as representa-
tives from the UN Global Compact, UNEP, WRI and Oxfam. The outcomes of the Working
Group will feed into important United Nations processes, and in particular into the
Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability and the UN Conference on
Sustainable Development in 2012 (Rio+20).
12
Global temperatures are rising, with serious
implications for other physical and biological
systems.
12
Most climate change science has fo-
cused on these long-term physical effects. The
human impact of climate change has received

much less attention.
13

People in every country in the world
will be affected in some fashion by climate
change, but it disproportionately impacts
poor communities in developing countries.
By virtue of their geography, greater reliance
on natural resources, and lack of infrastruc-
ture, developing countries have greater expo-
sure to environmental risks. At least 70 per-
cent of the world’s poor live in rural areas,
14

and many smallholders are already struggling
to survive on marginal rural land. They are
thus highly vulnerable to water-, tempera-
ture- and weather-related crises. Further, poor
communities lack access to crucial assets and
nancial savings that provide a necessary buf-
fer when faced with these shocks.
Men and women are not equally affected
by climate change. While in many societies
women supply most of the labour needed to
produce food crops, women typically have
restricted access to markets, land and credit.
Therefore, while they are heavily dependent
on the natural resources most threatened by
climate change, they have limited resources
with which to cope.

15
Women (and children)
are more likely than men to die in disasters,
which are becoming more frequent and
intense due to climate change, and in post-
disaster areas women are at risk of gender-
based violence, trafcking and other forms of
exploitation.
16

Threats posed by climate change
to human development
The physical effects of climate change have
serious consequences for people across the
world, particularly those who are already
poor and vulnerable. Anticipated climate
change impacts include:
● Water shortages and droughts.
● Increased frequency and severity of oods.
● More unpredictable weather patterns.
Impacts of Climate Change on
Sustainable Development and Economic
and Social Stability
● More frequent and intense storms and
weather-related disasters.
● Decreased agricultural productivity and ris-
ing food insecurity.
● Public health problems.
While there is some uncertainty about the
exact nature, timing, location and magnitude

of climate impacts, many of them are already
materializing, and they will be worsened and
accompanied by new threats. The section
that follows explores these climate change
impacts and their effect on human well-
being and sustainable development in more
detail.
WATER SHORTAGES AND DROUGHTS.
Water is the lifeblood of communities and
a driver of economic health and well-being,
and in 2010, the UN General Assembly
adopted a resolution on the human right
to water.
17
With glaciers and snow in rapid
retreat, those that depend on snowmelt from
major mountain regions like the Hindu-Kush,
Himalaya and Andes will face severe threats
to their water security. Changing rainfall pat-
terns will lead to periods of extreme drought
in some regions. Drought reduces agricultural
and livestock productivity, increases re haz-
ard and reduces the amount of water avail-
able for human health and economic activity.
Climate change stymies current efforts to
ensure equitable access to water across the
globe to the one billion people who already
lack access to safe water.
18


● A recent study of 60 years of data from 925
rivers that provide nearly three-fourths of
the world’s water supply found that one-
third of the rivers are signicantly affected
by climate change, mainly in terms of
diminished ow. The Ganges, Niger, Colo-
rado and Yellow Rivers are among those
affected.
● The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) reports that by 2020, up
to 250 million people across Africa are
expected to face increasingly severe water
shortages.
13
● The IPCC projects that by 2080, Africa will
see an increase of 5 to 8 percent of arid and
semi-arid land under a range of climate
scenarios.
● Since the 1970s, rainfall has decreased by
an average of 2.4 percent per decade in
tropical rainforest regions.
● A climate model produced by the United
Kingdom Meteorological Ofce predicts
that by 2080, 30 percent of the earth’s
surface will be subject to extreme drought,
compared with 3 percent at the beginning
of the twenty-rst century.
Sources: Renton, 2009. Suffering the Science: Climate change,
people, and poverty; IPCC, 2007. Climate Change 2007: Synthesis
Report; Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009. Human Impact

Report: Climate Change – The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis.
INCREASED FREQUENCY AND
SEVERITY OF FLOODS. Rising sea levels and
more frequent heavy precipitation events in
some regions will lead to more frequent and
damaging oods. People in the heavily popu-
lated, low-lying deltas of Asia and Africa and
those living on small islands are particularly
vulnerable, and they are some of the poorest
communities in the world.
19
Flooding causes
severe economic damage, erodes natural
and human-constructed storm barriers, and
results in loss of life. It also leads to loss of
agricultural land. Increased salinization of
coastal areas can have a detrimental impact
on agriculture.
● Under current sea-level rise projections of
around 40 centimeters by the end of this
century, the number of coastal dwellers at
risk from ooding could increase from 13
million to 94 million during this period.
● A sea-level rise of 1 meter could affect 17
percent of Bangladesh’s land area, destroy-
ing the homes and livelihoods of 25 million
people.
● In 2010, ooding in Pakistan due to heavy
rains affected more than 20 million liveli-
hoods and caused $9.5 billion in economic

damages.
Sources: Asian Development Bank, 2009. The Economics of Climate
Change in Southeast Asia: A Regional Review; Renton, 2009.
Suffering the Science: Climate change, people, and poverty; Oxfam
America, 2010. Fact Sheet: Pakistan Floods; Ahmed, 2010. “Paki-
stan ood damage at $9.5 billion.”

MORE UNPREDICTABLE WEATHER
PATTERNS.
A 2009 Oxfam study highlights
a number of consistent observations from
farmers in the developing world, including:
shrinking of temperate “transitional” seasons;
higher overall temperatures, particularly in
winter; more erratic rainfall and increasingly
unpredictable starts to the rainy seasons;
an increase in unusual and “unseasonable”
weather events; heavier rains and longer dry
spells; and stronger, shifting winds.
20
Less
predictable weather patterns make it difcult
for small-scale farmers, who are already liv-
ing on the edge, to decide when to cultivate,
sow and harvest.
● Communities in Nepal are concerned about
warmer and drier winters, with declining
rain and snow that normally falls in hilly
districts from December to January.
● In Uganda, farmers report increasingly un-

reliable precipitation during the long rains
from March to June.
● In Vietnam, communities say that storms
are increasingly tracking south into areas
that had never experienced them before.
Source: Jennings and Magrath, 2009. What Happened to the
Seasons?
MORE FREQUENT AND INTENSE STORMS
AND WEATHER-RELATED DISASTERS.
21

While no individual extreme weather event
can be attributed to climate change, the
trend line is striking: Climate-related storms
are increasing in frequency
22
and intensity.
23

According to the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC), it is likely that
“future tropical cyclones (typhoons and
hurricanes) will become more intense, with
larger peak wind speeds and more heavy pre-
cipitation associated with ongoing increases
of tropical sea-surface temperatures.”
24
When
a severe weather event outstrips a commu-
nity’s coping capacity, disaster occurs. As

a result of weather-related disasters, each
year nearly 90 million people require urgent
assistance due to injury, loss of property,
exposure to disease, or shortages of food and
fresh water.
25
● Ninety-eight percent of those seriously
affected by weather-related disasters live
in the developing world, and develop-
ing countries experience 99 percent of all
deaths and over 90 percent of economic
14
losses from weather-related disasters.
● From 2004 to 2009, the annual cost of
weather-related disasters in developing
countries ranged between $50 and $230
billion per year.
Source: Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009. Human Impact
Report: Climate Change – The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis.
DECREASED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIV-
ITY AND RISING FOOD INSECURITY.
At lower latitudes, crop productivity is pro-
jected to decrease for even small local tem-
perature increases, especially in seasonally
dry and tropical regions, which will increase
the risk of hunger.
26
Smallholders will face
a particularly difcult struggle to maintain
food security in the face of declining yields

and loss of crops. The Food and Agricultural
Organization recently said that global food
production must increase by 70 percent —
and double in the developing world — to
adequately feed a population expected to
reach 9.1 billion in 2050.
27
Climate change’s
devastating effect on existing food shortages
and price spikes is particularly worrisome,
given that nearly 1 billion people are already
hungry today.
28
● In some African countries, by 2020 yields
from rain-fed agriculture could decrease by
up to 50 percent, severely compromising
agricultural production and access to food.
● Within 20 years, climate change-induced
declines in global food production could
force global food prices up by 20 percent.
● Today, climate change is projected to be at
the root of hunger and malnutrition for
about 45 million people. That number is
projected to climb to 75 million within 20
years.
Sources: IPCC, 2007. Climate Change 2007: Synthesis Report;
Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009. Human Impact Report:
Climate Change — The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis
.
PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEMS. Climate

change will alter the spatial distribution
of some infectious diseases.
29
Insect-borne
diseases like malaria and dengue fever and
water-borne diseases like schistosomiasis
30
are
shifting geographically with rising tempera-
tures and oods, expanding to regions with
public health systems and populations that
are ill-equipped to cope.
31
Flooding greatly
increases the risk of diarrheal disease due
to poor sanitation. Mega-cities in tropical
areas will be hard-hit by disease due to their
concentrated populations and vulnerability
to extreme weather events. In addition to dis-
ease, climate change-driven heat waves pose a
serious threat to human productivity and can
result in increased health-related problems
and mortality, particularly for farmers, la-
bourers and others who work outdoors.
● The World Health Organization calculates
that each year the health of 235 million
people is affected by climate change, par-
ticularly due to malaria, diarrheal disease
and malnutrition.
● Climate change-triggered malaria outbreaks

are currently estimated to affect over 10
million people and kill approximately
55,000.
● Schistosomiasis is spreading to new areas of
China, where a predicted 210 million more
people will be threatened by the disease by
2030.
● In Delhi, India, mortality rates rise by up
to 4 percent with every 1ºC of temperature
rise above the heat range that is considered
tolerable. The gure is nearly 6 percent in
Bangkok, Thailand.
Sources: Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009. Human Impact
Report: Climate Change — The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis; Renton,
2009. Suffering the Science: Climate change, people, and poverty.
While each of these climate change impacts
poses a serious threat to human develop-
ment, it is striking to consider the cumulative
effect of multiple climate impacts on existing
conditions of poverty. A poor community or
family might be able to recover from an occa-
sional ood. However, if a ood is concurrent
with a malaria outbreak, and the family loses
its crops and faces rapidly mounting medi-
cal costs, its economic or physical survival
may be at risk. Together, climate impacts and
existing social and economic conditions can
push people across critical thresholds or “tip-
ping points”
32

that far exceed their ability to
cope. Should these climate and social tipping
points occur, businesses operating in these re-
gions would feel the impacts across all related
areas of their operations and value chains.
33

It is precisely due to the complex connections
between climate impacts and poverty that
building long-term resilience in vulnerable
communities requires such a comprehensive,
multipronged response.
15
Economic and security
implications of climate change
In the age of globalization, countries’ econo-
mies are linked through a complex inow
and outow of goods, services, technology,
capital, information and labour. The intercon-
nectedness of today’s global markets makes
all economies vulnerable to climate change,
no matter where it occurs. Severe ooding in
the Philippines, drought in Zimbabwe or res
in Russia can have a reverberating impact on
economies around the globe. As Ko An-
nan noted in his 2001 Nobel Prize speech,
“Scientists tell us that the world of nature is
so small and interdependent that a buttery
apping its wings in the Amazon rainforest
can generate a violent storm on the other side

of the earth. This principle is known as the
‘Buttery Effect’. Today, we realize, perhaps
more than ever, that the world of human ac-
tivity also has its own ‘Buttery Effect’ — for
better or for worse.”
34
If unaddressed, climate change will wreak
considerable direct economic damage. It will
disrupt global agricultural markets, destroy
critical infrastructure and transportation,
and hamper the ow of goods and services. It
will also make energy markets more volatile
and unpredictable
35
due to the challenges
of meeting new peak demand, storm dam-
age to energy installations,
36
and the impact
of water scarcity on energy sources, such as
nuclear power and hydropower.
37

It is difcult to put an aggregate price on
this economic damage, given uncertainties
and varying methodologies. The Stern Review,
a study commissioned by the British govern-
ment that analyzed the economics of climate
change, estimated that the overall costs and
risks of inaction on climate change would be

equivalent to losing 5 to 20 percent of GDP
each year.
38
An eight-country study by the Eco-
nomics of Climate Adaptation Working Group
determined that current climate impacts cost
the locations studied from 1 to 12 percent of
GDP each year, and that within the next 20
years climate change could more than double
those percentage losses.
39
A recent report by
the Asian Development Bank found that if the
world continues “business-as-usual” emissions
trends and fails to adapt, the economic cost of
climate change to Indonesia, the Philippines,
Thailand and Vietnam alone could equal a loss
of 6.7 percent of their combined gross domes-
tic product by 2100, in contrast to a projected
global average of 2.6 percent.
40

The true economic impact of climate
change includes more indirect, “hidden”
economic costs, like reduced workdays and
productivity, re-routing trafc, provision of
emergency shelter and supplies, potential
relocation and retraining, and more compli-
cated government and corporate planning
processes due to increased risk and uncer-

tainty.
41
“Non-market impacts,” such as the
geographic expansion of diseases and degra-
dation of important global ecosystems, also
have a considerable economic cost. However,
these variables are difcult to adequately
predict and measure. Government budgets
will be stretched as the public sector tries to
respond to these multipronged challenges.
An International Monetary Fund analysis
shows that climate change-related economic
losses will fall most heavily on developing
and emerging economies, at least in terms of
the size of their economies.
42
Many of these
countries already rely heavily on foreign aid
and loans to support their social and econom-
ic development processes, and climate change
threatens to undo progress they are making
on both fronts. Further, many developed
countries and global companies count on de-
veloping and emerging economies as current
and future growth markets; climate change
can thus have a damaging economic “ripple
effect”. Countries hard-hit by climate change
will face challenges in their efforts to be
dynamic international trade and investment
partners, with follow-on impacts on overall

global economic growth and stability.
The United States 2010 Quadrennial
Defense Review warns that effects of climate
change such as droughts, oods and disease,
among others, could further weaken fragile
governments around the world.
43
Climate
change has been referred to as a “threat
multiplier”
44
to national and international
security by worsening existing problems
of poverty, social tension, environmental
degradation, ineffective leadership and weak
institutions. Weather extremes, food and wa-
ter scarcity, and climate-related public health
threats are projected to displace between
150 million and 1 billion people as climate
change unfolds.
45
Climate change may also
lead to increased conict over resources,
including across borders. For example, a long-
standing treaty governs India and Pakistan’s
shared use of the Indus River. The glaciers
that feed this river are melting fast, and its
ow will eventually become seasonal, with
16
serious implications for agricultural produc-

tion in Pakistan, in particular. Treaty renego-
tiations may be difcult, due to existing tense
relations between the two countries, and any
major delays in securing Pakistan’s water
source that signicantly affect its popula-
tion could lead to social unrest.
46
One report
estimates that 46 countries will face a “high
risk of violent conict” when climate change
exacerbates traditional security threats.
47
Adaptation: a cost-effective
approach for addressing
climate change
The World Bank estimates that between 2010
and 2050 it will cost developing countries $70
billion to $100 billion per year on average to
meet their climate change adaptation needs.
48

Unfortunately, current ows of nance for
adaptation to vulnerable countries are much
less than needed. Of the major public funding
dedicated to climate change, less than 10 per-
cent of approved funding has been allocated
to adaptation, compared to 82 percent for
climate change mitigation.
49


The evidence, however, is clear: It is much
smarter to anticipate and address climate
change impacts and build resilience up front
than to simply respond to the human and
economic costs after impacts occur. One main
conclusion of the Stern Review was that the
cost of taking action now would likely be sev-
eral orders of magnitude less than the costs
of inaction. The following examples illustrate
this point for public sector investments, but
the principle would equally apply to private
sector investments. According to an analysis
by the US Geological Survey and the World
Bank, an investment of $40 billion to reduce
disaster risk could prevent disaster losses of
$280 billion.
50
Evidence from a mangrove-
planting project designed to protect coastal
populations from storm surges in Vietnam
estimated economic benets that were 52
times higher than costs.
51
In Brazil, a ood re-
construction and prevention project designed
to break the cycle of periodic ooding in 2005
resulted in a return on investment of greater
than 50 percent by reducing residential prop-
erty damages.
52

In its eight-country study,
which included developing and developed
countries, the Economics of Climate Adapta-
tion Working Group found that between 40
and 68 percent of expected losses through
2030 under high climate change scenarios
could be averted through adaptation mea-
sures whose economic benets outweighed
their costs.
53
In short, nancing adaptation
and resilience is a cost-effective investment
that can pay for itself many times over.
17
Climate Change Adaptation and
the Private Sector
Adapting to climate change at the neces-
sary scale and scope requires a coordinated,
multisectoral, global effort. To date, govern-
ments and civil society organizations have led
this effort. They have advocated for increased
public, grant-based funding for adaptation;
stressed the need for good governance of
global adaptation funds; prepared national
and local climate change adaptation plans;
and begun to experiment with adaptation ap-
proaches to determine what works. It is now
timely to consider opportunities to create
and build on synergies among strategies that
allow for a transition to a green economy and

measures required to adapt to climate change.
The private sector will be a pivotal player in
this process.
The private sector is a relative newcomer
to climate change adaptation, although many
companies have a long-standing focus on
and commitment to environmental sustain-
ability more broadly. To date, most businesses
concerned about climate change have been
more focused on reducing their GHG emis-
sions to mitigate climate change than on
responding to current and evolving climate
change risks and impacts. The many reasons
for this — including risk and uncertainty,
lack of information and modelling tools, dif-
culty in communicating and championing
adaptation inside the company, challenges of
mainstreaming climate risk and opportunity
analysis into core business processes, and lack
of incentives to act today — are explored in
detail in Chapters 2 and 3 of this report.
While most companies have not yet begun
to understand how climate change will affect
them, it will affect all companies — large and
small — and some will be affected more than
others. It is thus squarely in companies’ busi-
ness interest to engage on the issue of climate
change adaptation. Companies are beginning
to recognize that the physical, economic and
social impacts of climate change translate

into concrete business risks that must be as-
sessed and managed through targeted adapta-
tion measures. Further, there are inextricable
links between healthy, resilient communities
and vibrant, protable businesses.
Community risks are business risks
Local and global companies rely on commu-
nity members as employees, suppliers and
customers. They depend on local services and
infrastructure to run their businesses. If farm-
ers are not able to meet production targets, or
a local port is destroyed by a storm, or a com-
munity is ravaged by malaria, then businesses
suffer as well. There is also a growing recogni-
tion within the private sector — underscored
by the ndings of the survey of Caring for
Climate signatories — that while climate
change poses signicant risks to operations
and value chains, it also brings new opportu-
nities to improve business practices, and to
create business value while helping people
adapt. Well-designed business responses to
climate change can help build strong, healthy
communities in which people and companies
can thrive.
The risk of maladaptation
Before turning to a discussion of the business
risks and opportunities that climate change
presents for companies, it is essential to point
out that some business actions in response to

climate change have the potential to exac-
erbate local vulnerability to climate change
impacts. For example, if a company aggres-
sively increases the size of a plantation to
compensate for declining agricultural yields
on the existing site, pushing smallholders to
marginal and degraded land in the process,
local livelihoods are put at risk. This type of
private sector adaptation measure actually
decreases, rather than increases, community
resilience.
Climate change adds importance and ur-
gency to businesses’ environmental and social
accountability commitments, due to the addi-
tional stress that it places on shared resources.
Companies often have signicant leverage over
the way natural resources like water, forests
and mangroves are managed and used, and
over how local communities are engaged and
compensated. In the context of climate change
adaptation, it will be increasingly important
that companies align their natural resource
management practices with the needs of
vulnerable people within the local community.
WHAT IS MALADAPTATION?
Caring for Climate defines
maladaptation as “an action or
process that increases vulnera-
bility to climate change-related
hazards. Maladaptive actions

and processes often include
planned development poli-
cies and measures that deliver
short-term gains or economic
benefits but lead to exacerbated
vulnerability in the medium to
long-term.”
18
Companies can avoid contributing to climate
vulnerability by consulting with communities
and designing their adaptation responses with
communities’ climate change impacts and
needs in mind. As is described in more detail
in Chapter 3, integrating environmental and
social safeguards into national laws, policies
and regulations, and government contracts can
also make important contributions to incentiv-
izing business behaviour, averting maladapta-
tion and improving community vitality and
resilience to climate change.
Perspectives from Caring for
Climate companies on adaptation
Among the 72 companies that responded to
the Caring for Climate survey, 83 percent be-
lieve that climate change impacts pose a risk
to their products or services. Seventy percent
of the companies with climate change strate-
gies in place reported that their strategy has
some level of adaptation focus.
However, companies nd it challenging to

fully incorporate climate risks into their op-
erations and value chains. Only around one-
third of the companies reported that their cli-
mate change strategy has a “strong emphasis”
on the issue of climate change risks. About
one quarter have not yet been able to deter-
mine — or were not able to provide concrete
information on — the percentage of their
operating sites that are vulnerable to climate
change. Qualitative responses from the sur-
vey conrmed a number of factors that make
it difcult for companies to operationalize a
focus on climate risks, including the long-
term nature of climate change, the overall
uncertainty inherent in projections of climate
impacts, lack of good information and lack of
incentives for action.
However, the private sector is also keenly
aware that risk and opportunity tend to go
hand in hand. Climate change adaptation
is no exception. As shown in Figure 1, 86
percent of Caring for Climate companies
surveyed said that responding to climate
change risks, or investing in adaptation solu-
tions, poses a business opportunity for their
company.
Thirty-six percent reported that their cli-
mate change strategy has a “strong empha-
sis” on responding to opportunities. These
ndings echo one of the main ndings of the

Carbon Disclosure Project’s 2010 Global 500
report, which notes that relative to compa-
nies’ responses in previous years, “there has
been a shift in emphasis from an approach
dominated by risk, to one that now also
embraces opportunity.”
54
The sections that
follow dig deeper into the climate change
risks that companies face, and make the case
for opportunities for companies to adapt in
ways that contribute to sustainable develop-
ment and community resilience.
CHALLENGES ASSOCIATED WITH ADAPTATION
IDENTIFIED BY CARING FOR CLIMATE SIGNATORIES
“Adaptation is a longer-term process and highly specu-
lative in terms of what specific changes will take place
and where, so it can be hard to develop business plans to
address adaptation.”
“We can’t respond to what we don’t know.”
“Mitigation has been the sole driving force globally,
with little discussion around adaptation. Most grading
systems look only at mitigation and do not give scores or
benefit to having adaptation strategies. There is a need
for scoring systems to incorporate adaptation and also
for the broader discussion to be more focused on it.”
“Does responding to climate change risks, or
investing in adaptation solutions, pose a busi-
ness opportunity for your company?”
NO

14%
YES
86%
FIGURE 1. CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION
AS A BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
19
Climate Change Risks for Companies
Rising temperatures, oods, extreme weather
events and water scarcity take their toll on
communities and the economy. These climate
change impacts also present numerous risks
for companies’ operations and value chains.
Companies will experience climate change
risks and impacts in different ways and to
different degrees, depending in large part on
their business sector and the geographic loca-
tion of their operations, suppliers and current
and future customers.
A typology of climate change risks
facing the private sector
Categories of risk confronting companies in
the face of climate change include: physical
and operational, regulatory and legal, nanc-
ing, market, political, and reputational.
55
Spe-
cic examples of these risks were highlighted
by Caring for Climate signatories in the survey.
While all businesses face these risks, they are
compounded for businesses with operations,

employees, suppliers, and current or antici-
pated customers in developing countries. The
survey data show that 53 percent operate in
South America, 50 percent in Southeast Asia,
40 percent in South Central Asia, and 43 per-
cent in Southern Africa. These companies are
particularly at risk because, as noted earlier in
this chapter, developing countries are dispro-
portionately vulnerable to climate change and
have limited resources with which to adapt.
Companies can play a critical role in building
and not undermining climate resilience in
these markets.
Physical and operational risks: Changing
temperatures and precipitation patterns may
lead to decreased availability and increased
price of critical raw materials in the supply
chain, especially agricultural commodities.
Access to other core inputs, including water
and energy, will become increasingly unreli-
able. Storms and oods may damage build-
ings, equipment and other physical assets, or
create costly disruptions in production and
transport due to damage to railroads, ports,
bridges, power plants and other infrastruc-
ture. Companies may see increased employee
absenteeism and decreased productivity due
to the impact of more severe weather events
and declining health. Insurance costs may
rise. As Figure 2 illustrates, Caring for Climate

signatories recognize these physical and op-
erational risks. In many cases, these risks will
be of high priority to vulnerable communities
as well.
Regulatory and legal risks: As countries
adapt to climate change, they will likely use
a range of regulatory tools to better manage
their natural resources and reduce their di-
saster risk. For example, they may enact new
land use or zoning regulations, or new build-
ing codes. They may put more stringent limits
on water use and irrigation. While developed
countries are farther ahead on enactment
and enforcement of these types of regulatory
frameworks, many developing countries are
following suit.
56
Such regulations will force
some companies to undergo operational
changes in response, making some activities
and processes more expensive or even un-
feasible. Corporate decisions that fail to take
climate change impacts into account could be
subject to a range of legal challenges. Govern-
ments may also begin to require companies
to disclose their climate risks and adaptation
Increasing costs for natural
resources, raw materials
Water scarcity
Energy security

Threats to human health
Greater exposure to natural
disasters, changing weather patterns
Transportation risks
Deterioration of water quality
Decreased agricultural productivity
Risk of flood, drought, impacts
on coastal resources
Food security
Threats to ecosystems and biodiversity
Percentage of companies that consider risks as having “high” or “very
high” impact on operations and strategy
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
FIGURE 2. COMPANIES’ CONCERNS ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS
20
efforts, as the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission has done in the United States (see
text box above).
Financing risks: Climate change may also
affect companies’ access to capital, as investors
become more aware of climate change impacts
and the need for adaptation. Debt nancing
may be harder to attract or more expensive
for companies that are seen as “high risk” to
climate change impacts (as businesses with op-
erations, employees and supply chains in de-
veloping countries will certainly be). Investors
will likely have lower condence in companies
that are failing to analyze climate risks and
to take proactive action to adapt and manage

such risks, and may increase their demands or
expectations for full disclosure in this area.
Market risks: In the face of climate change,
certain products and services will become
less relevant or ineffective. As some regions
become hotter, wetter or drier, companies
may nd that their customer bases undergo
dramatic geographic shifts. Among custom-
ers with higher awareness of climate change,
demand could decrease for products and
services that make inefcient use of scarce
resources like energy and water or that
exacerbate climate risks. As consumers in the
developing world are forced to grapple with
climate change, they may also have reduced
spending power (particularly with respect to
nonessential goods and services), thus impact-
ing some companies’ protability.
Political risks: As developing countries
struggle with natural resource, food security,
health and economic challenges associated
with climate change, they may face increased
domestic conict and instability. These types
of disruptions are simply bad for business.
While local companies based in climate-
vulnerable countries will be most affected,
political instability also poses signicant
threats for globalized companies operating in
those countries, particularly companies with
signicant on-the-ground physical invest-

ments or sizeable market share.
Reputational risks: Among some consum-
ers, particularly those in North American and
European markets, companies seen as major
emitters of GHGs — or those that are not tak-
ing adequate measures to reduce their emis-
sions — are viewed unfavourably. As consum-
ers across the globe become increasingly aware
of and impacted by climate change, they may
turn their attention to companies’ adaptation
strategies. A company may receive negative
media coverage, be subject to civil society
advocacy efforts, or even lose its ability to oper-
ate in a given location if it is perceived to be
exacerbating climate vulnerability in develop-
ing countries through maladaptation, or not
taking appropriate action to address risks. In
this age of instant digital communications and
widespread use of social media, it has become
much less possible for companies to employ a
double standard between their environmental
and social accountability policies and their
day-to-day actions on the ground in poor com-
munities. Condemnation for bad practices can
spread quickly, with considerable damage to a
business’s reputation.
Impacts of climate change on
individual business sectors
Companies’ physical and operational risks, in
particular, are likely to be sector-specic. Table

1 provides illustrative examples of specic risks
that companies in select industry sectors may
face, conrmed by perspectives from companies
participating in the Caring for Climate survey.
Businesses will nd that climate change
exacerbates existing operational and supply
chain risks. It can also yield entirely new risks,
and dangerous interrelationships among risks.
As noted earlier in this chapter, climate change
is a “threat multiplier.” For example, food secu-
rity and energy security are highly dependent
on the availability and predictability of water
INVESTOR INTEREST IN BUSINESSES’ CLIMATE RISKS
In early 2010, the US Securities and Exchange Com-
mission issued guidance for publicly held companies
regarding disclosure of material climate risks. By July
2010 leading US investors had filed a record 101 climate
change shareholder resolutions with 88 US and Canadi-
an companies that face far-reaching business challenges
from climate change, nearly a 50 percent increase in
resolutions filed over the previous year. While some
resolutions were mitigation-related, others focused
on adaptation and management of climate risk. For
example, a resolution filed by Calvert Investments with
Kroger, a retail food chain, asked Kroger to report on
how the company will assess and manage the impacts
of climate change on the corporation, specifically with
regard to its supply chain.
Source: Investor Network on Climate Risk (www.incr.com)
SELECT CLIMATE CHANGE

RISKS IDENTIFIED BY CAR-
ING FOR CLIMATE SIGNATO-
RIES IN THE SURVEY
•More stringent legisla-
tion related to climate
risk management, and a
greater number of lawsuits
in cases of infringement.
•Brand and reputational
damage, if there is a real
or perceived inadequate
response by companies
to the impacts of climate
change.
•Reduced consumer spend-
ing power due to economic
impacts of climate change.
21
resources. Water scarcity can lead to stress
throughout the entire food and energy system,
and can generate economic collapse and social
unrest. These types of interconnected risks will
be particularly difcult for businesses to assess
and manage.
As a result of climate change, traditional
ways that businesses approach risk need
to change. Integrated challenges require
integrated solutions. If businesses look at
these risks holistically from a climate change
adaptation perspective, they will be able to

better identify trends and emerging risks
and develop a comprehensive strategy
to address them. Using a climate change
adaptation lens for risk analysis will enable
businesses to draw on a broader range of
international best practices, tapping into
businesses, policy and civil society exper-
tise worldwide to more effectively respond
to these risks. Furthermore, if businesses
design their adaptation strategies with the
needs of vulnerable people in mind, they
will see greater coherence between their
own strategies and public sector approach-
es to adaptation and resilience-building.
Business
sector
Illustrative risks Concerns expressed in the survey by Caring for Climate
signatories in these business sectors
Agriculture,
food and
beverage
Water scarcity; crop damage due to weather
extremes; increased exposure to new pests
and disease; transportation problems
• Water scarcity is our primary vulnerability.
• The impact of climate change on agricultural products is increasing.
Energy and
utilities
Reputational risk; physical risk due to extreme
weather events; peak demand could outstrip

capacity; hot weather may reduce efficiency of
extraction
• Our climate change risk includes potential physical damage to personnel and
equipment, and potential disruption of the production activities of our offshore
installations.
• Significant climate changes (mainly in terms of temperature, but also wind and
water conditions) from one year to another can cause substantial variations in the
balance of supply and demand for electricity and gas.
• Water shortages can reduce hydroelectric power production.
Manufacturing
and consumer
goods
Higher prices of raw materials; higher energy
prices; unanticipated changes in customer
preferences; supply chain disruptions
• Dramatically rising energy prices will have a negative impact on the
operating costs of the company.
• Reduced availability, supply and quality of raw materials is a concern.
• We could face a production bottleneck due to a functional failure in our
supply chain.
Banking and
finance
Macroeconomic downturn hurts volume;
customer defaults in retail sector; uninsured
damage to project assets; exposure to indirect
risks through investment portfolio
• Certain agricultural products might be affected by the intensification of
droughts…it is necessary to put climate impacts into monetary terms to “wake
up” the banking system.
• Climate change changes our risk profile for certain sectors that we lend to and

thus our lending “appetite” within those sectors.
Construction
and building
materials
Changes in building codes and regulations;
reduced worker productivity due to heat;
disruptions in delivery of materials; disruptions
due to extreme weather events
• Legal risks take on considerable significance in the context of adaptation.
Tougher legislation may give rise to a greater number of lawsuits due to cases
of infringement.
• Many of our plants are vulnerable because they are located in coastal areas
worldwide.
Health care and
pharmaceuti-
cals
Changing disease vectors; increased water-
borne illness; higher health insurance costs
• Potential and actual drought situations present a risk for us.
• Water availability in several manufacturing regions is a concern.
Mining and
industrial met-
als
Regulatory risk; vulnerable to energy and
water shortages due to intensity of use; rainfall
and flooding creates risk of overflow of storage
reservoirs containing contaminants
• Increasing regulatory pressure will impact the steel industry in terms of impacts
on the process, location of facilities and availability of raw materials.
• Our main concerns are energy security (because much of our power comes from

large hydroelectric plants via national power companies) and water security.
Insurance Increased volume of claims; historical loss
information less reliable; risk modelling and
product pricing more complex; some risks may
be uninsurable
• We conducted research on the expected impacts of climate change on insurance
portfolios with regards to northern European winter storms.
• We are seeing changing weather patterns and an increase in insured losses in
some geographical areas.
Note: Illustrative risks have been drawn from a table found in Nitkin et al. that compiles existing literature on projected business risks, by sector. Nitkin et al., 2009. A Systematic Review of the
Literature on Business Adaptation to Climate Change: Case studies and tools (3 of 4).
TABLE 1. CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS BY BUSINESS SECTOR
22
Adaptation Solutions that Promote
Sustainable Development and Build
Resilience
As companies ramp up and rene their
analysis of what climate change means for
them in real and practical terms, they should
seek to identify “win-win” opportunities to
adapt in ways that simultaneously contribute
to efforts identied by communities that will
be hardest hit and most affected by climate
change. The key is to nd the nexus of shared
interest where business incentives align with
the adaptation needs of vulnerable popula-
tions in developing countries. This nexus —
shown in Figure 3 — bears exciting potential
to advance sustainable development goals
and stimulate economic growth, thus hasten-

ing the transition to a green economy.
The business case for action
There is a strong business case for companies
to identify and implement climate change
adaptation measures that simultaneously
address the needs of vulnerable communities
in developing countries and their own bot-
tom lines.
57
Sustainable development-focused
adaptation can help companies:
Avoid costs, manage liabilities and build
resilience to climate change impacts: In
today’s globally integrated economy, many
companies rely on suppliers or have on-the-
ground operations in developing countries
and emerging economies. By analyzing
climate risks throughout the value chain and
mitigating risks through concrete changes
in such areas as production processes, im-
proved management of ecosystem services,
infrastructure and asset siting, supply chain
communications and management, commu-
nity outreach, and employee education and
benets, companies can better manage their
liabilities and avoid signicant costs and dis-
ruptions, while simultaneously reducing risks
faced by vulnerable populations within the
value chain. Businesses’ protability depends
on strong, resilient suppliers, employees and

surrounding communities. It is important to
note that if done well, these changes can cre-
ate short-term value for businesses and their
stakeholders, regardless of whether or when
anticipated climate impacts happen.
Expand market share and create wealth
in communities: Effective adaptation to
climate change will require the development
and deployment of a wide range of new and
innovative products, strategies and services to
help vulnerable people in developing coun-
tries manage climate risks and impacts. Many
of these are also part of a green economy.
Climate change presents an opportunity for
companies to diversify and expand their
market share while simultaneously address-
ing the consequences of climate change. As
global companies invest in new adaptation
markets in the developing world, it will
be essential for them to partner with local
companies and communities to ensure that
technologies are appropriate and affordable,
and that market expansion is accompanied by
important knowledge and skill transfer. New
markets can also be tapped by small-scale
local entrepreneurs who are grounded in the
needs of their communities and, through
credit and other public incentives, can seize
new opportunities to expand their businesses.
FIGURE 3. THE STRATEGIC NEXUS FOR PRIVATE SECTOR ADAPTATION EFFORTS

Companies’
critical
climate
change
adaptation
interests
Vulnerable
communities’
critical
climate
change
adaptation
interests
Strategic
opportunities
to promote
sustainable
development
through
adaptation
23
Access new nancing streams: Under inter-
national climate change agreements, there
will be increased public funding available for
adaptation efforts in vulnerable communities
in developing countries, and governments
will look for corporate partners who can
deliver the requisite goods and services. Not
only does an effective response to climate
change require nancing for development of

low-carbon technologies, it may also result
in research and development funding for
products and services that address critical
adaptation needs. Local and global companies
that take early action to develop expertise
in climate change adaptation and green
economy solutions will have a competitive
edge in these contracting opportunities with
government partners.
Build corporate reputation and exercise
good corporate citizenship: Many compa-
nies have a long-standing commitment and
track record in the areas of environmental
sustainability and corporate social responsi-
bility (CSR). Climate change adaptation needs
provide companies with an opportunity to
solidify the linkages between their business
activities and CSR strategies in developing
countries and to add urgency to existing ef-
forts. Productive engagement with vulnerable
communities on climate change adaptation
and resilience-building and ensuring that
business activities do not exacerbate climate
vulnerability can be viewed as new com-
ponents of the evolving denitions of good
corporate citizenship and social and environ-
mental accountability. Proactive, purposeful,
well-documented, well-publicized adaptation
measures may provide reputational benets
among key stakeholders — including custom-

ers, investors and potential employees across
the globe — similar to the benets currently
associated with companies’ reduction of GHG
emissions.
Strategic opportunities for private
sector investment in adaptation
The most promising opportunities for compa-
nies to complement public sector initiatives
and investments in climate change adapta-
tion lie in two key areas:
Building resilience within company opera-
tions and the value chain: Companies can
conduct a comprehensive assessment of the
climate risks they face, including risks faced
by their suppliers, employees and assets locat-
ed in vulnerable regions, as well as the risks
faced by communities in the areas in which
they operate. They can then develop a range
of measures to address climate risks and
increase long-term climate resilience. Actions
will be sector- and company-specic, but
could include using more resource-efcient
production techniques, conserving natural
resources upon which they and communities
depend, sourcing from local businesses to
strengthen the economic base, and build-
ing capacity throughout their value chain to
manage climate risk.
Developing and deploying new products
and services: Successful adaptation to cli-

mate change will require improvements in
water and energy management, new strate-
gies for ood control, improved farming
techniques and better early-warning systems
for disasters. If companies factor climate risks
into their market analysis, they can become
part of what Oxfam is calling “the new adap-
tation marketplace”
58
by identifying, develop-
ing and deploying new products and services
that will help weather the impacts of climate
change. It will be important for companies to
consult with affected communities and build
new products and services from the bottom
up to ensure that they meet priority adapta-
tion needs.
Chapter 2 of this report, the case study
provided in this chapter and in Chapter 2,
and Annex B provide additional insights on
what it means for companies to invest in
these areas. There are a few existing examples
and models of private sector investments in
adaptation, but investments must increase
exponentially to address future adaptation
needs at scale. Companies’ efforts in these
two areas will require active and sustained
engagement with national, regional and
local stakeholders in vulnerable countries,
particularly in Small Island Developing States

and Least Developed Countries, to provide re-
sources that people most affected by climate
change want and need. Working with vulner-
able communities to build their resilience
and help them adapt to the consequences of
climate change can enable them to become
more economically, socially and politically
resilient in the broadest sense, with positive
benets for the local and the global economy.
24
COMPANY CASE STUDY: SWISS RE
Swiss Re, one of the largest reinsurance companies in the world, has worked for 20 years to promote better
understanding and management of climate risk. The company has pioneered the development and deploy-
ment of tailored insurance products, including weather risk insurance, to protect the rural poor in developing
countries. A pioneering effort in India in 2004 reached more than 350,000 smallholders. In 2008, partnering
with the World Bank and the government of Malawi, Swiss Re developed a derivative product to help protect
Malawi against drought-related shortfalls in maize production. Swiss Re is currently collaborating with Oxfam,
the Ethiopian government, a local non-governmental organization, and other partners through the Horn of
Africa Risk Transfer for Adaptation (HARITA) project, which provides weather index insurance for smallholder
rain-fed farmers in Ethiopia.
Around 85 percent of all Ethiopians depend on agriculture for their livelihoods, and they are some of the
poorest farmers in the world. Their harvests and incomes are already threatened by drought, which will be
exacerbated by climate change. To address this problem, Swiss Re and its partners developed a risk manage-
ment package that enables farmers participating in a government social safety net scheme to pay for weather
risk insurance premiums by contributing their own labour to community projects that reduce risk, including
irrigation, soil improvement and composting. In the event of a seasonal drought, insurance payouts triggered
automatically by low rainfall enable HARITA farmers to afford the seeds and inputs necessary to plant in
the following season, without having to sell off productive assets to survive. Since the launch of the project in
2008, participation in the insurance scheme has rapidly increased, from an initial 200 households in the first
year to 1,300 households in 2010. Many of these rural households are led by women.

In Ethiopia, Swiss Re has pursued an opportunity to create business value in the long term while assisting
those most vulnerable to climate change. Only about 0.4 percent of Ethiopia’s population of around 90 million
has insurance, so the HARITA project also serves as an important step toward developing Ethiopia’s nascent
insurance market. The goal for 2010/11 is to provide insurance for up to 13,000 households.
Looking Ahead
Climate change is a challenge of tremen-
dous complexity due to its scale, scope and
urgency. There are robust linkages between
climate change and sustainable development;
thus climate change can serve as a powerful
catalyst for transforming the way we pursue
economic growth and poverty alleviation.
Effective climate change mitigation and adap-
tation requires an unprecedented marshalling
of global commitment, resources, innova-
tion and expertise. While public investment
and policies are fundamental to success-
fully tackling climate change adaptation in
vulnerable communities, the private sector
is a pivotal complementary player in this
process. Climate change adaptation presents
considerable risks and exciting opportunities
for the private sector. Companies that rigor-
ously assess these risks and opportunities
and implement creative solutions that build
long-term resilience will create business value
while bolstering people’s efforts to adapt.
Those that practice maladaptation, or oth-
erwise undermine the efforts of vulnerable
communities to adapt, may face increasing

reputational and brand risks.
The chapters that follow offer options for
companies and governments that will galva-
nize private sector adaptation investments at
the critical nexus of companies’ needs and
communities’ needs. These investments can
serve as a crucial complement to public sec-
tor efforts. This must be a purposeful process:
It will not happen by chance. If governments,
companies, civil society and communities
work together, we can transform climate risks
and impacts rather than allowing them to
transform us.
25
2.DOING
BUSINESS IN
OUR CHANGING
CLIMATE:
MEASURES FOR
PRACTICAL
BUSINESS
ACTION

×